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Putting ‘Americans First’ benefits India

Subtle layoffs in the sunrise IT sector in India is currently underway, sending a shock wave amongst the tech worker community. Repercussions of such indiscreet pink slips internally within organizations have created anxiety and depression amongst the workers. Incident of suicide by an employee due to job loss too has surfaced recently.

Over the past couple of years, Indian companies were recepients of the coveted H-1b visas in large numbers, repeatedly exhausting the annual visa quota, eventually leading to the lottery system. A foreign guest worker on the H-1b visa provided for labour arbitrage and the visa sponsoring employer(s) benefitted from the cost differential. Speculating an earning of 18,000 $-22,000$ per sponsored employee monthly, in talent brokerage alone. It was therefore proven, that H-1b workers were often underpaid and thus responsible in driving down the wages and creating a divide between local and foreign workers.

‘Americans First’ is an initiative to restore the good faith in hiring and to enforce Equal Employment Opportunities by putting Americans First.Eliminating fraud and abuse in the usage of American work visa programs, therefore becomes necessary to bring market competitiveness.

Putting ‘Americans First’, benefits India too. Not by scraping the work visa programs, but by closing the policy loopholes and tuning it for future use. Under the Trump administration, focus on STEM skills is a national priority. Moving forward, preference will be given to those with relevant degrees with matching experience from abroad.

‘Computer Programmer’ as a speciality occupation, most commonly used by Indian IT companies to petition work visas for their employees in India has been disqualified. The policy memorandum was put into effect, because all programmers share a fundamental job duty, i.e., writing and testing computer code, and so it was improper to conclude based on this information that the government would consider the position of a programmer to qualify as a “specialty occupation”.

While this remedial intervention was necessary to curb arrival of under qualified talent into the Americas,it has forced structural changes within companies, that are dependant on the mobility of their employees across continents.

As expected, the impact of this legislative amendment has affected the low/semi skilled professionals, often freshers, working for IT Companies in India.

While re-skilling their workforce and further training them is an option available to most companies, ongoing media reports suggest subtle layoffs are underway across the IT industry within India.

While certain corporate honchos have been spitballing the issues around layoffs, claiming it to be an exaggeration of a few sporadic incidents, they have also made many futile attempts to woo America by promising to create jobs there, much like a child asking to bribe his own father.

While it may be prudent to observe, when questioned, petitioning Indian companies themselves were unaware on the numbers of their existing employees on H-1b visas. ‘Banking visas’ and ‘benching employees’ as a process, has managed to fuel a large pool of underskilled resources out of India, many that eventually fall out of the system,and are deemed ‘visa orphans’.

Rather than trying to impress America by offering to invest and create jobs there, Indian companies could harness the much needed goodwill if they simply took care of their existing employees here or their visa orphans in The Americas.

In conclusion, could this ongoing Indian on Indian subjugation be the reason why there has not been a single invention from India in the last 60 years that has became a household name globally, nor any idea that led to “earth shaking” invention to “delight global citizens”.

What are your thoughts ?

DISCLAIMER : Views expressed above are the author's own.

Blog

It is estimated that over 100 million people will migrate between 2015 and 2050. Developing countries will supply manpower to numerous aging populations to meet skill shortages that are already showing. That will mean large-scale migration across continents. No wonder most countries have put immigration procedures for qualified immigration on top of their agenda.
Globalization forces people into migration into countries where the ideas of divide and rule have been codified as a "legal" justification for the injustices. Inequality therefore is re-created and re-introduced by a global economic system.
In the realm of social reality - this social inequality creates a caste system, where one class of workers is pitted against the other for personal gain. Where when one side of the coin gets tainted, the other side shines brightly, putting the society at large in a conundrum.
This blog examines the globalized political and economic system that creates illegality by displacing people and then denying the guest workers rights and equality as they have to do what they have to do in order to survive.

Author

Rajiv has over 25 years of experience in education and technology sectors. Rajiv has lived in the United States for more than a decade helping large companies deal movement of global talent.
Rajiv has been a proponent of migration for over a decade and has actively moved forward the debate on Indo-American work visa related migration policies. He is the Founder of The National Organisation for Software and Technology Professionals, in 2004. He has authored two books – "American Work Permit – Official Rules & Regulations of American Work Visa" and "Green Carrot – America's Work Visa Crisis". He is interviewed in over 200 articles in over 30 leading publications both in India as well as the United States.
He has testified against the work visa program abuse and assisted in the drafting of the 'Visa Fraud and Abuse Prevention Act of 2007' to prevent visa misuse and document fraud in the immigration process. His research work has been cited by the UK Border Agency as well as the US Homeland Security.

Rajiv has over 25 years of experience in education and technology sectors. Rajiv has lived in the United States for more than a decade helping large compani. . .

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Blog

It is estimated that over 100 million people will migrate between 2015 and 2050. Developing countries will supply manpower to numerous aging populations to meet skill shortages that are already showing. That will mean large-scale migration across continents. No wonder most countries have put immigration procedures for qualified immigration on top of their agenda.
Globalization forces people into migration into countries where the ideas of divide and rule have been codified as a "legal" justification for the injustices. Inequality therefore is re-created and re-introduced by a global economic system.
In the realm of social reality - this social inequality creates a caste system, where one class of workers is pitted against the other for personal gain. Where when one side of the coin gets tainted, the other side shines brightly, putting the society at large in a conundrum.
This blog examines the globalized political and economic system that creates illegality by displacing people and then denying the guest workers rights and equality as they have to do what they have to do in order to survive.

Author

Rajiv has over 25 years of experience in education and technology sectors. Rajiv has lived in the United States for more than a decade helping large companies deal movement of global talent.
Rajiv has been a proponent of migration for over a decade and has actively moved forward the debate on Indo-American work visa related migration policies. He is the Founder of The National Organisation for Software and Technology Professionals, in 2004. He has authored two books – "American Work Permit – Official Rules & Regulations of American Work Visa" and "Green Carrot – America's Work Visa Crisis". He is interviewed in over 200 articles in over 30 leading publications both in India as well as the United States.
He has testified against the work visa program abuse and assisted in the drafting of the 'Visa Fraud and Abuse Prevention Act of 2007' to prevent visa misuse and document fraud in the immigration process. His research work has been cited by the UK Border Agency as well as the US Homeland Security.

Rajiv has over 25 years of experience in education and technology sectors. Rajiv has lived in the United States for more than a decade helping large compani. . .